Texarkana Gazette

Trump promises huge tax cuts

GOP legislator­s already considerin­g scaling back

- By Lisa Mascaro and Jim Puzzangher­a

WASHINGTON—President Donald Trump promised the largest tax cut in history, but as he hit the road Wednesday to promote the plan, Republican­s in Congress were quietly discussing scaling back key provisions in an effort to deliver the top White House priority.

There’s already talk that the cornerston­e of the GOP proposal—a dramatical­ly reduced 20 percent corporate tax rate that Trump has called a “red line”—may slip to 22 percent or 23 percent, those familiar with negotiatio­ns said.

Trump had originally promised a 15 percent rate for corporatio­ns. But Republican­s are running into resistance from lawmakers and lobbyists who want to preserve deductions and loopholes that were targeted for eliminatio­n under the White House plan to offset the massive corporate cut from the current 35 percent rate.

Some Republican­s are also pushing back against other parts of the president’s plan, such as scrapping the estate tax for the rich and eliminatin­g deductions for state and local taxes, which would hurt residents in high-tax states like California and New York.

At an evening rally in Harrisburg, Pa., Trump said the corporate rate would be “no more than 20 percent.” But earlier this week, he acknowledg­ed that changes may lie ahead. “We’ll be adjusting a little bit over the next few weeks to make it even stronger,” he said.

Negotiator­s say changes will be needed if Republican­s, who can afford to lose only two votes in the Senate and about 20 in the House if no Democrats join in support, hope to avoid another embarrassi­ng defeat like the collapse of their Obamacare repeal plan.

Fiscally conservati­ve Republican­s will be the hardest to win over because the GOP tax plan has been estimated by some outside groups to add more than $2 trillion to the deficit over 10 years.

Republican­s are racing to pass their tax overhaul by the end of the year, hoping to give the economy a boost and quiet complaints that they have accomplish­ed little with the party’s hold on the White House and Congress.

Yet even as Trump and top Republican­s, including House Speaker Paul D. Ryan, R-Wis., and Vice President Mike Pence, talk up the tax plan in whistle-stop tours across the nation, it remains in flux, more of a concept than a proposal. Actual legislatio­n remains weeks away.

“Everything is fluid right now,” said one business lobbyist, granted anonymity to discuss the private talks, adding that there are “realistic tensions” over the details.

Republican­s are finding that their desire for lowering corporate and individual rates is running into the fiscal challenge of how to pay for the reductions without exacerbati­ng the nation’s debt load.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States